Spain has agreed with Brussels a deficit target of 3.1 percent of GDP for this year, which Linde has said he expects the government to be able to meet.

Linde reiterated a forecast for 2017 Spanish economic growth of 2.8 percent and said the economy was resisting the gradual disappearance of tail winds such as low energy prices. However, uncertainties from Britain's exit from the EU remained high, he said.

The most recent indicators showed that economic growth in the first quarter of 2017 could have been greater than the 0.7 percent registered in the last quarter of 2016, Linde said.